The size of a 1-minute video can vary significantly based on factors such as resolution, frame rate, and compression method. For example, a standard definition video might be around 10-20 MB, while a high-definition video can range from 50 MB to over 200 MB. Additionally, more efficient compression formats like H.264 can reduce file size without sacrificing too much quality. Ultimately, the exact size depends on the specific parameters of the video being recorded.
Chat with our AI personalities
It takes 6 - 8MB to watch a 1 minute an SD quality video
How many minutes of WHAT, exactly? A minute of sound, stored as MP3, uses up about 1 MB - but the amount of space per minute can vary widely, depending on the quality of the recording. A single minute of video, in high quality, will take up several MB - but once again, exactly how much will depend on the quality of the recording.
If you mean in a music file, or other sound file, it varies widely, depending on the quality of the music. A good quality MP3 uses about 1 MB for every minute of sound, but you can still get an acceptable quality for a fraction of a MB/minute. Anyway, 1 MB/minute seems to be typical.
I will assume you want to store music, perhaps in MP3 or Ogg Vorbis format. In fairly high quality, every minute of music takes about 1 MB. (But you can store several minutes of music per MB in lower, but still not too distorted, quality; on the other hand, you can have VERY high quality, with several MB per minutes). The estimate of 1 MB per minute would give you 3000 minutes, or about 50 hours (2 days and nights) for the 3 GB.If you want to store movies, the situation is different. A minute of fairly LOW quality video may also take a MB, for a more acceptable, but not very high, quality, you need several MB per minute.
It depends a lot, hours of what, and at what quality. For a typical MP3 file (music or other sounds), I estimate 1 MB per minute, so 1 GB would give you a thousand minutes (about 17 hours). However, the space used by sound files, per minute, can vary a lot; I have seen MP3 files that used about 0.2 MB/minute, and whose quality was still quite acceptable. On the other hand, higher qualities (higher than 1 MB/minute) are possible as well.